| Literature DB >> 14530411 |
Hidemasa Oh1, Steven B Bradfute, Teresa D Gallardo, Teruya Nakamura, Vinciane Gaussin, Yuji Mishina, Jennifer Pocius, Lloyd H Michael, Richard R Behringer, Daniel J Garry, Mark L Entman, Michael D Schneider.
Abstract
Potential repair by cell grafting or mobilizing endogenous cells holds particular attraction in heart disease, where the meager capacity for cardiomyocyte proliferation likely contributes to the irreversibility of heart failure. Whether cardiac progenitors exist in adult myocardium itself is unanswered, as is the question whether undifferentiated cardiac precursor cells merely fuse with preexisting myocytes. Here we report the existence of adult heart-derived cardiac progenitor cells expressing stem cell antigen-1. Initially, the cells express neither cardiac structural genes nor Nkx2.5 but differentiate in vitro in response to 5'-azacytidine, in part depending on Bmpr1a, a receptor for bone morphogenetic proteins. Given intravenously after ischemia/reperfusion, cardiac stem cell antigen 1 cells home to injured myocardium. By using a Cre/Lox donor/recipient pair (alphaMHC-Cre/R26R), differentiation was shown to occur roughly equally, with and without fusion to host cells.Entities:
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Year: 2003 PMID: 14530411 PMCID: PMC218755 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2132126100
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205